
BPC-157 is a short peptide that comes from a protein in stomach juice. It's widely studied as a "repair helper" for soft tissue, gut lining, tendons, and ligaments.
A deeper look for the curious
For readers who want the full mechanism — feel free to skim.
BPC-157 is a small peptide originally isolated from a protective protein in human stomach juice. It helps the body build new blood vessels in damaged areas, tells cells to migrate into wounds, and calms inflammation. The result: tendons, muscles, gut lining, and other tissues heal faster in research models.
What researchers have observed in studies
Promotes angiogenesis through VEGF pathway upregulation
Accelerates tendon-to-bone healing in preclinical models
Demonstrates gastroprotective effects against various insults
Counteracts organ damage from NSAIDs and alcohol
VEGF, NO system, FAK-paxillin pathway
15 amino acid peptide (pentadecapeptide)
Amino acid chain
What scientists study this compound for
Often looked at for nagging tendonitis, partial tears, and post-surgical recovery — especially in athletes.
Studied as a way to protect and repair the stomach and intestinal lining from ulcers, NSAID damage, and IBD.
Explored for speeding recovery of pulled muscles and soft-tissue injuries.
Early research looks at its role in protecting nerves after injury or toxic exposure.
High-performance liquid chromatography confirms compound purity for every batch we produce.
ESI-MS verifies molecular weight and structural identity match the target compound.
Complete analytical data including chromatograms and mass spectra available per batch.
Laboratory use only. This product is sold for laboratory use and is not intended for human consumption or medical use.
Third-party verified. Typical purity ≥97%.